Gearman provides a generic framework to farm out work to other
machines or dispatch function calls to machines that are better suited
to do the work. It allows you to do work in parallel, to load balance
processing, and to call functions between languages. It can be used in
a variety of applications, from high-availability web sites to the
transport for database replication.
WWW: http://www.gearman.org/

===> The following configuration options are available for gearmand-devel-1.1.8_5:
DRIZZLE=off: Drizzle support for persistent queue
HIREDIS=off: Hiredis support for persistent queue
MEMCACHED=off: memcached support for persistent queue
MYSQL=off: MySQL support for persistent queue
PGSQL=off: PostgreSQL support for persistent queue
SQLITE=on: SQLite support for persistent queue
TOKYOCAB=off: Tokyo Cabinet support for persistent queue
===> Use 'make config' to modify these settings

Remove OSVERSION checks that do not make sense any more.
For example (${OSVERSION} >= 900000 && ${OSVERSION} < 900021) is always true,
as is (${OSVERSION} > 900002 || ${OSVERSION} < 900000 && ${OSVERSION} > 800107).
Regarding patches, when an EXTRA_PATCHES is no longer needed, I remove it, when
it is always needed, I renamed it, in one case, I merged two patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2209

Only use libevent2
Remove libevent as libevent2 is providing a good compatibility interface as well
as providing better performances.
Remove custom patches from libevent2 and install libevent2 the regular way
Mark ports abusing private fields of the libevent1 API as broken
Import a patch from fedora to have honeyd working with libevent2
Remove most of the patches necessary to find the custom installation we used to
have for libevent2
With hat: portmgr

Gearman provides a generic framework to farm out work to other
machines or dispatch function calls to machines that are better suited
to do the work. It allows you to do work in parallel, to load balance
processing, and to call functions between languages. It can be used in
a variety of applications, from high-availability web sites to the
transport for database replication.
WWW: http://www.gearman.org/